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How To Advocate for Yourself at Work When You Hate Conflict (Podcast Episode 19)

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If you hate conflict, speaking up at work can feel impossible. Today, you’ll learn why your brain shuts down when you try to advocate for yourself, why conflict feels so intense for you, how to regulate yourself before conversations, and the communication strategies that help you advocate for yourself without spiraling.

5-minute read

Introduction        

If you hate conflict, you probably spend way too much time rehearsing conversations in your head. You edit yourself. You hold back. You wait for the “right moment” that never arrives. You settle for less than you want because the idea of confrontation makes your stomach drop. Then you get annoyed at yourself for not speaking up sooner.

But being conflict-avoidant doesn’t mean you’re weak. It means your nervous system interprets interpersonal tension as a threat. When you even think about speaking up, your brain predicts negative outcomes, your body prepares for danger, and the words evaporate. As I’ve mentioned many times on the podcast, research shows that social threat activates the same neural pathways as physical pain. So no, you’re not being dramatic. Your body thinks conflict is unsafe.

At the same time, self-advocacy is essential for career growth, burnout prevention, and psychological well-being. The research shows again and again that people who speak up clearly are more respected, more effective, and more satisfied at work. The problem isn’t that you don’t know what to say. It’s that your nervous system won’t let you say it.

Why You Hate Conflict

Understanding what’s happening internally takes you out of shame and into strategy. There are four main reasons why you hate conflict (you might fit into all four).

  1. Your brain predicts danger: If you grew up in environments where conflict meant punishment, withdrawal, yelling, or instability, your brain wired itself to avoid it. Even low-level disagreement can feel dangerous because your nervous system expects the worst.
  2. You fear losing connection: Conflict threatens belonging, and belonging is a survival need. Like I just mentioned, the research shows that social rejection activates pain circuits in your brain! If your worth has been tied to keeping the peace, speaking up feels risky.
  3. You fear being seen as “difficult” or “dramatic”: Many conflict-avoidant people have internalized rules about being agreeable and not taking up space. Speaking up triggers guilt, not empowerment.
  4. You don’t like emotional intensity: You’re not avoiding the issue, you’re likely avoiding the physiological experience of conflict. That mix of tension, adrenaline, heat, and shakiness creates a full body reaction that feels unbearable.

I’m telling you all this so you can work with your biology instead of fighting it.

What You Can Do: Six Strategies for Speaking Up Without Spiraling

Before we get to the strategies, today’s free download is The Speak Up Starter Kit: Five Scripts for People Who Hate Conflict. So, listen well to these tips but, if you need more specifics, download the free Speak Up Starter Kit.

1. Regulate before you communicate

You can’t advocate effectively if your nervous system is in fight or flight. Use a quick grounding technique before you speak, such as the double-inhale I love to talk about or putting something cold on the back of your neck. There’s lots of research showing how these types of activities calm the amygdala and bring your prefrontal cortex back online.

2. Start with clarity, not apology

Conflict-avoidant people often soften or shrink their message until it’s unrecognizable. Start with the clearest version of what you actually want. Instead of: “Sorry, but I was wondering if maybe…” Try: “I want to talk about something that will help me be more effective.” You’re signaling self-respect without aggression.

3. Use the “neutral first sentence”

The hardest part in having these types of conversations is starting. Pre-write a first line that doesn’t spike your anxiety. Try: “I want to check in about something that’s been on my mind.” Or “I want to talk through something so we can move forward more smoothly.” You’re creating an entry point for yourself.

4. Name your intention

People hear your intention before they hear your content. When you state your purpose upfront, defensiveness drops. Some examples could be:

  • “My intention is to be clear, not confrontational.”
  • “My intention is to solve this, not blame anyone.”
  • “My intention is that we both walk away feeling heard.”

Clarity reduces emotional charge.

5. Use “I” statements that stay grounded and specific

Instead of focusing on the other person’s failings, focus on your needs and experiences. Try: “I feel overwhelmed when priorities shift without notice. I need clearer expectations so I can plan my workload.” You’re advocating without attacking.

6. Prepare a one boundary sentence

Conflict-avoidant people panic when conversations go sideways because they don’t know how to stop the escalation. Decide on one sentence you’ll use to pause the interaction. Options:

  • “I want to keep this productive, so let’s pause for a moment.”
  • “I’m not able to resolve this in this tone. Let’s revisit it after we’ve both had time to think.”

This gives you control without drama.

How To Advocate for Yourself Without Sounding Aggressive

Here’s the secret: assertiveness is calm clarity. You’re not trying to overpower anyone. You’re stating your needs and holding your ground.

Use this simple structure:

  1. State the issue
  2. State your need
  3. Ask for the next step

Example: “When deadlines change at the last minute, I feel overloaded. I need earlier notice so I can plan realistically. Can we set a process for that moving forward?” That’s assertiveness. Direct, respectful, and effective.

Wrap Up

Conflict avoidance isn’t a flaw. It’s a nervous system strategy that once kept you safe. But you’re not stuck with it. You can learn to regulate your body, clarify your message, set boundaries, and speak up with confidence.

Advocating for yourself doesn’t mean being harsh. It means telling the truth kindly and clearly. When you learn how to do that, conflict stops feeling like danger and starts feeling like communication.

Putting Today’s Lesson into Action

As I mentioned earlier, today’s free download is The Speak Up Starter Kit: Five Scripts for People Who Hate Conflict. What you’ll get:

  • Five plug-and-play scripts for common workplace situations
  • A “neutral first sentence” bank, so you always know how to start
  • A one-minute regulation routine to use before tough conversations

A template for stating needs clearly without sounding confrontational

Resources for How To Advocate for Yourself at Work When You Hate Conflict

How to Set Intentions in Just 18 Seconds (aka The 18-Second Shift)

Eisenberger, N. I. (2012). The pain of social disconnection: Examining the shared neural underpinnings of physical and social pain. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 13(6), 421-434. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn3231

Alberti, R. E., & Emmons, M. L. (2008). Your perfect right: Assertiveness and equality in your life and relationships (9th ed.). Impact Publishers.

van der Kolk, B. A. (2015). The body keeps the score: Brain, mind, and body in the healing of trauma. Penguin Books.

Arnsten, A. F. T. (2009). Stress signalling pathways that impair prefrontal cortex structure and function. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 10(6), 410–422. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2648

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